Russia outraged after Kiev accuses Moscow of nuclear attack threats

Following comments from Ukraine’s Defense Minister Valery Geletey of Moscow threatening with a nuclear attack on its neighbor, Moscow said it was shocked by the statement. Russia warned that such rhetoric only deepens the civil stand-off in Ukraine.

“Geletey’s calls to get ready for ‘tens of thousands’ of new
victims in what he called ‘Great Patriotic War’ and what in fact
is a new punitive operation in his own country are appalling. He
only drags the Ukrainian people into a new round of the bloody
civil stand-off,” Russia’s Foreign Ministry said in a
statement Monday.

Earlier Geletey wrote in his Facebook that the operation “to
cleanse Ukraine’s east from terrorists” was over. He,
however, proceeded to accuse Russia of direct military
involvement in the east that followed the rebels’ “defeat.”

“A big war has come to our home, a war Europe has not seen
since WWII,” Geletey wrote alleging that Russia not only
attempted to secure its position on the rebel-held territories,
but also advance onto other regions.

He said that Moscow - through "unofficial channels" -
has “repeatedly threatened to use tactical nuclear
weapons” on Ukraine if Kiev continues to resist.

“It is hard to believe that such statements can come from a
defense minister of a civilized state. Otherwise, it’s just not
clear how tens of thousands of Ukrainian families could entrust
this official with lives of their children, brothers and
husbands, mobilized into the Ukrainian army to wage a fratricidal
war in their own country,” Moscow said, adding that this was
a “blatant” attempt on Geletey’s behalf to secure his
own post.

Earlier on Monday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov
stressed there would be "no military intervention by Russia
into the conflict in Ukraine".

Lavrov said he hopes that the Monday peace talks held in Minsk will pave the way to agreeing on
“an immediate unconditional ceasefire” in eastern
Ukraine.

The minister called the peace plan offered by the Ukrainian
president Petro Poroshenko “unrealistic” and called of
the US and the EU to persuade Kiev to stop using heavy artillery
and airstrikes against the civilian population in the country’s
east.

“We assume that the most important thing is for Washington
and Brussels to demand Kiev do the same thing they demand in any
other conflict: stop using heavy artillery, aviation against the
cities, against civilians; not to destroy schools,
hospitals,” Lavrov said.

While Kiev and NATO have repeatedly voiced claims of Russian
military "invasion" in eastern Ukraine, no evidence proving Moscow's interference into the
country's civil war has ever been presented, except for several
satellite images dismissed by Russian Defense Ministry as
"fake". The images were provided by a commercial
company DigitalGlobe operating civilian satellites.

The only confirmed crossing of Russian troops over the Ukrainian
border took place end August when a group of 10 paratroopers patrolling a border area
accidentally stepped over the largely unmarked border and were
detained by Kiev troops. Ukrainian authorities transferred the
detained soldiers to Kiev, used the incident for publicity purposes and
agreed to release the troops only after days of negotiations.

Meanwhile, hundreds of Ukrainian army troops have
crossed the Russian border in the ongoing conflict, with many of
them receiving safe shelter and food in temporary camps. On Wednesday, a group of 62 Ukrainian
soldiers crossed into Russia seeking refuge.